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Circuit Superstars review | PC Gamer

Byadmin

Oct 23, 2021


need to know

What is it? An isometric racer with genuine sim chops.
Expect to pay $20/£15
Release October 12
Developer Original Fire Games
Publisher Square Enix Collective
Reviewed on i7 9700K, RTX 1080 TI, 16GB RAM
Multiplayer? Up to 12 players
Link Official site

In the time it takes to read this sentence, 17.3 game developers will try and fail to do what Circuit Superstars does: a mix of arcade and sim racing that feels enriched, not compromised, by both. Admittedly that was quite a long sentence. Still, the point stands.

Every racing game press release since 1997 has promised a perfect blend of arcade accessibility and a depth of simulation that rewards continued effort with gradual mastery, and we’re right to react like dogs hearing a high-pitched noise when we see it because nobody actually pulls it off. Not really. Nobody but Vancouver-based Original Fire Games, releasing its debut under the Square Enix Collective indie initiative. 

If you’re a veteran of many a cross-legged Micro Machines campaign from the 16-bit days or, to be honest, if you’ve simply seen a screenshot and clocked the isometric camera, you’ve got a handle on how it feels to drive. What isn’t evident until your first race is the sheer amount of subtlety baked into those adorable little vehicles. Going fast here is about picking out and committing to perfect racing lines, keeping all inputs smooth, and holding onto momentum like it’s a fistful of James May’s M&S Autograph blazer after he wanders a bit too close during a Grand Tour filming.

(Image credit: Square Enix)

Each day I’ve gone back to it, I’ve found some new way to unlock more speed. A micro-revelation that makes me want to go through every racing series—twelve, since you ask—all over again. It is, I’m surprised to find, my favourite racing game for years.  



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